Summary: Raenef is the black sheep of the demon court, with minimal knowledge of magic and courtly etiquette. In order to help him claim his birthright as a demon lord, the gods send him the wise and noble demon teacher Eclipse to be his tutor. As Raenef and Eclipse begin their journey of discovery, they find that the bonds of friendship are stronger than the teacher/student relationship.

Why Did I Read The Book: For the Manga Appreciation Week. Why did I pick this one in particular? Amazon recommendations. *Ana rolls eyes*

Review:

Will I ever learn? Instead of picking a recommendation from any of the myriad of bloggers that read Manga, I go and get one based on Amazon recommendations. This is not the first time I end up with a contender for Worst Book of the Year (Noughts and Crosses anyone?) .

Demon Diary in one word: Meh.

I wished this was quite enough to constitute a review since I don’t want to spend any more time than I already did with this but something (Thea) tells me it is not.

Young Raenef is the newly appointed Demon Lord , a position he accepted merely because he, being a street urchin, wanted housing and feeding for free. But so much more comes attached to the “job” – as anyone with a shred of intelligence can surmise by its title – Hello, Demon LORD. Raenef is to inherit the powers of the Demon Lord that came before him and to learn the arts of being a powerful demon in the wars against humans. A Demon called Eclipse, rumoured to be very cruel and powerful is to be his instructor and the comic centres on these two characters’ relationship.

It kicks off with Eclipse teaching Raenef how to address those that are beneath him (ie. pretty much anyone) and those first scenes are enough to tell me that I am in for a bumpy ride. I am sure Raenef was intended to come across as a loveable fool, or an endearing youngster with a heart of gold, but the better words to describe him would be: moronic idiot. His incapacity to grasp even the basics of what he is supposed to be was mind-blowing. I guess the Eclipse School of Teaching doesn’t help either – I fail to see how yelling “you will reign in terror whether you like it or not” to your student is an effective way of teaching but what do I know?

From the get go, it is clear this is intended to be a light, comic story– and the examples I used above are in truth, supposed to be funny. Yet, they are not.

Eclipse who is rumoured to be this really mean guy is and is respected by everybody soon enough starts to behave like Raenef and becomes attached to the young chap and they develop a friendship – probably a prelude of things to come, in which Raenef, the Demon Lord himself, with his humanity and goodness will most likely bridge the gap between demons and humans?

But the irony was lost in me because the text was mediocre, the art was nothing to write home about and the book failed miserably in what it set out to do: make me laugh. I wonder if maybe the jokes got lost in the translation? The second volume has a different writer which may well indicate better things to come. Unfortunately I haven’t got the slightest inclination to find out.

Notable Quotes / Parts: errr….

Additional Thoughts: there are two bonus stories with Demon Diary. Crystal Heart and Terra both written by Soome Lee and illustrated by the same Kara. What can I say? Both as mediocre and boring as the book they are attached to.

Verdict: Don’t waste your time or your money with this one.

Rating: 1 – yes, I thought it was that bad and I want my hours (ok, it was half an hour at the most, still I could have watched a re-run episode of Friends – much funnier) and my money (7 quid!!) back.

Reading Next – The Tarot Cafe Vols. 1-7 by Park Sang-sun

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Ana Grilo is a Brazilian who moved to the UK because of the weather. No, seriously. She works with translations in RL and hopes one day The Book Smugglers will be her day job. When she’s not here at The Book Smugglers, she is hogging our Twitter feed.

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noun
1 : a book review blog specializing in speculative fiction and popgeekery for all ages since 2008.
2 : a publisher of speculative short fiction and nonfiction since 2014.
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